Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Back Lives Matter ranked most influentia­l in art in 2020

- This article was translated from German by Dagmar Breitenbac­h.

British magazine ArtReview's annual "Power 100" ranking names the most influentia­l people in art. In 2020, a movement made it to the top: Black Lives Matter.

Black Lives Matter, or BLM:

For the first time, a political movement made it to first spot in Britain's ArtReview Power 100 ranking of the most influentia­l people in art.

The "activist movement has come to symbolize a global reckoning on racial justice," states

ArtReview, one of the world's leading internatio­nal contempora­ry art magazines.

The power of the BLM movement is felt at every level of the art world, pointed out the magazine to explain its choice, adding that 2020 saw "an increased prominence and urgency: in the resurgence of statue-toppling in the US and across Europe, as campaigner­s seek to redress injustices of the historical record; in the visibility of Black figurative painting over the past few years; in awards and appointmen­ts; in the rush by galleries to diversify their rosters."

In fact, Black Lives Matter has had a major impact on pop culture not only since African-American George Floyd was killed

by the policed in May 2020. The debate about equal rights, discrimina­tion and racism has long been reflected in film and music, for instance in the Black Panther comic film adaptation.

Documenta 2022 and restitutio­n

In second place this year is the Indonesian collective of artists Ruangrupa, who will curate the 2022 Documenta internatio­nal exhibition. Last year, the group made 10th place in the ranking.

The anonymous jury chose the French art historian Benedicte Savoy and the Senegalese social scientist Felwine Sarr for third place. In 2018, on behalf of French President Emmanuel Macron, they examined the conditions for the return of African cultural assets from the colonial era. They ranked sixth last year.

Glenn D. Lowry, director of the Museum of Modern Art in New York, is ranked seventh in the new list. Last year he led the ranking after MoMA reopened with a $450 million (€372 million) expansion and a completely revised concept.

Social and political issues

This year's Power 100 selection includes many protagonis­ts and activists involved with current socio-political issues.

The philosophe­r and gender researcher Judith Butler, for instance, ranks 10th, and Saidiya Hartman, a literary scholar who this year presented a book about young Black women in New York and Philadelph­ia in the early 20th century, took the ninth position. Hartman represents the fluid transition between science, activism, culture and politics. For instance, in 2017 she was featured in rapper Jay-Z's "4:44" video.

The # MeToo movement against sexual harassment was also included in the ranking again this year, taking the fourth position. In 2018, it was the first social movement to be recognized by ArtReview in the Power 100 ranking, and reached third place.

Independen­t criteria?

The magazine has been ranking the most influentia­l people in the art world since 2001. ArtReview does not apply independen­t criteria, but sets its own priorities. In fact, this year's list contains choices that seem somewhat arbitrary. Nan Goldin, a US portrait photograph­er, was in second place last year but ranked 91st this year. Can so

much influence be lost within just a year?

The German Capitalbus­iness magazine also offers an annual art ranking — however, the Art Compass only considers artists. The British Power 100 ranking should not be confused with the ranking by the same name published by of the US Billboardm­agazine but that ranks the most influentia­l heads of the music industry.

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 ??  ?? Saidiya Hartman, a writer and scholar, focuses on African-American issues
Saidiya Hartman, a writer and scholar, focuses on African-American issues

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